Evolution, 4th Edition

(Amelia) #1

SPECiES And SPECiATion 219


Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Troutt Visual Services
Evolution4e_0906.ai Date 11-02-2016

cornutum

coronatum

platyrhinos

modestum

douglassi

m’calli

solare

Phrynosoma

FIGURE 9.6 An example of species
distinguished by morphological charac-
ters. These seven species of horned lizards
(Phrynosoma) from western North America
can be distinguished by differences in
the number, size, and arrangement of
horns and scales as well as body size and
proportions, color pattern, and habitat.
Good scientific drawings can often show
detailed features better than photographs
can, especially when the critical features
are subtle. (From [98].)

Each species in the leaf beetle genus Ophraella feeds on
one species or a few related species of plants. O. notu-
lata, for example, has been found feeding only on two
species of Iva along the East Coast of the United States.
This species is most readily distinguished from other
species of Ophraella by the number and pattern of dark
stripes on each wing cover.
Some leaf beetles found in Florida closely resembled
O. notulata but were collected on ragweed, Ambrosia ar-
temisiifolia. This host association suggested the possibility
that these beetles were a different species. In a broader
study of the genus, one of the authors of this book (DJF)
collected samples of beetles from both Ambrosia and
Iva throughout Florida and examined them by enzyme
electrophoresis [30]. He found consistent differences in
allele frequencies between samples from Iva and from
Ambrosia at three loci, even in samples from both plants
in the same locality. In the most extreme case, one allele
had an overall frequency of 0.968 in Ambrosia-derived
specimens, but was absent in Iva-derived specimens,
in which a different allele had a frequency of 0.989. No
specimens had heterozygous allele profiles that would
suggest hybridization. Later study showed differences in
mitochondrial DNA as well. Thus these genetic markers
were evidence of two reproductively isolated gene pools.
A careful examination then revealed average differences
between Ambrosia- and Iva-associated beetles in a few

morphological characters, such as the shape of one of the
mouthparts and the relative length of the legs. Later stud-
ies showed that adults and newly hatched larvae strongly
prefer their natural host plant (Ambrosia or Iva) when
given a choice, and that the beetles mate preferentially
with their own species. In laboratory crosses, viable eggs
were obtained by mating female Ambrosia beetles with
males from Iva, but not the reverse. Few of the hybrid
larvae survived to adulthood, and none laid viable eggs.
Based on all of this evidence, the author concluded that
the Ambrosia-associated form is a distinct species, and he
named it Ophraella slobodkini in honor of the ecologist
Lawrence Slobodkin.

Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Troutt Visual Services
Evolution4e_Box09A.ai Date 11-20-2016

BOX 9A


Diagnosis of a New Species


Ophraella slobodkini

09_EVOL4E_CH09.indd 219 3/23/17 9:36 AM

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